The Sandgate Sea and Food Festival 2023

The Sandgate Sea and Food Festival 2023

On the evening of Saturday 26th August 2023, we’ll be welcoming back the Sandgate Sea and Food Festival FREE fireworks display, sponsored by the Roger de Haan Charitable Trust, from Granville Parade.

On Sunday 27th August there will be the Sandgate Sea and Food Festival, featuring live music, entertainment, stalls and great food on Sandgate’s Granville Parade, Castle Road Car Park and at businesses along Sandgate High Street.

Sandgate-Seafest-Flyer-2023-web-1

Programme

SATURDAY EVENING (26 August, 7-10pm)

Live music & stalls and our annual free firework display.

Live Music

GRANVILLE PARADE BEACH STAGE

  • The Liberators (8-10pm)

CASTLE ROAD CAR PARK

  • Terry Daniels (8-10pm)

SUNDAY (27 August, 10-5pm)

A fun day for all the family with live music, stalls and entertainment along Granville Parade & throughout Sandgate. Arts and Crafts Fair in the Chichester Hall, 70 Sandgate High Street.

Live Music

GRANVILLE PARADE BEACH STAGE

  • Gumboots Reggae 10am-12noon)
  • Rattlaz (12.30-2.30pm)
  • Steve Boltz (3-5pm)

CASTLE ROAD CAR PARK

  • A Jazz stage led by Roan Kearsey-Lawson and other musicians performing from noon.

THE SHIP INN

  • Steel And Strings Steel Band right on the seafront next to the restaurant (3pm onwards).

SANDGATE MEMBERS CLUB

  • Bill Palmer Disco & Karoake. Non-members welcome. (from 6pm)

The organisers would like to say a huge thank you to the generous sponsors of this event. Without their support it would not be possible to hold the festival: The Roger De Haan Charitable Trust, Sandgate Parish Council, Saga, Prater Raines, Joy-Bettany, Livingstone Homes & Smith Woolley Perry.

Can You Help Fill Our Barrow of Booze?

A key part of the Sandgate Sea and Food Festival each year is the draw to win a “barrow of booze”. That’s an eclectic collection of bottles, cans and more donated from across the village and conveniently served in a wheelbarrow to one lucky ticket buyer! All proceeds from ticket sales will go to the RNLI.

If you have a bottle or two you could donate to fill our barrow this year (unopened bottles only please!) then please drop them to Sandgate Library during opening hours or contact clerk@sandgatepc.org.uk to arrange delivery. Thank you! 

Parking Suspension Advance Notice

Parking on Granville Parade, Granville Road East & West and The Parade will be suspended from Noon on Saturday 26th until 7pm on Sunday 27th to allow for the Sea Festival and stalls including drop off, set up and break down.

There is also a parking suspension in Castle Road Car Park from noon on Saturday 26th and all day until 7pm on Sunday 27th August, to allow for deliveries and set-up on the Saturday and the market and break-down on the Sunday.

Please do NOT park in those areas during suspended hours. There are a lot of deliveries, stalls setting up and people visiting: leaving your car there while that is going on makes it much harder to do (and you may get a ticket!).

Posted by Tim Prater in News

Sandgate Community Garden: Update 13 August 2023

Sandgate Community Garden Team Diary Entry for 13th August: Praying for decent weather for the Sea Festival.

We are praying for decent weather at the end of the month for the Sea Festival because if it is anything like it was last weekend with waves crashing over the Sandgate Promenade, it will be a disaster.  However, being optimistic as always and keeping everything as well as our fingers crossed, Sunday 27th August WILL be a perfect day!

Sandgate-Seafest-Flyer-2023-web

The Animal and Plant Health Agency are still in situ with their welfare van, which was joined by another van, to continue the hunt for the Asian hornets in the area.  Nests were found in Seabrook, and the search is now on at Capel Le Ferne.  We believe they are making progress, but let us hope it is enough, or it could be a continuous battle, time will tell.

The hedge did get a trim this week.  Luckily the wind had died down enough to be able to sow seeds for mustard leaves, turnips, claytonia, spring cabbages and cauliflowers.  A few more plugs of spring onions got planted, and some kohl rabi.  The tomatoes as yet show no signs of blight but the likelihood is that it is only a matter of time before it shows up.  The pond has cheekily been growing lots of duckweed probably in response to having so much water, and so we have been regularly fishing it out from the surface to prevent it smothering the entire pond.

Some of our fruit trees have managed to produce some fruit this year which may actually stay on the trees long enough to ripen – well, you never know! 

On Thursday the brick planters outside the shops at Golden Valley got a tidy, and the weeds around the bases removed.  Often an onerous task, but made bearable with the addition of volunteers from Napier Barracks.  We are always grateful for the extra help.  We then went on to remove brambles from the orchard in Fremantle Park, and spent part of the afternoon eating blackberries fresh from the hedge line – nothing finer on a warm sunny day.

What’s next?

  • Trim the inside of the hedge
  • Plant out Chinese cabbages
  • Keep checking the tomatoes
  • Sow more claytonia

This weeks update from the Sandgate Community Garden Diary.

Posted by Tim Prater in Sandgate Community Garden

Sandgate Community Garden: Update 6 August 2023

Sandgate Community Garden Team Diary Entry for 6th August: Finding where the Asian hornets are nesting, destroying them.

There are times when you wonder if you should be careful what you wish for, having spent so long over the past few years going on about how little rain we have here in Sandgate.  We now seem to have a plentiful amount and the hope is that the sunshine will be returning anytime soon!  The rainfall for July was a massive 90 mm, and we certainly do not remember recording that much for a summer month before.  There has now been 27.9 mm of rain in the initial days of August!  It is the first time we have ever seen the pond full during the summer, or so much fungi around in the beds. 

We are keeping a very close eye on the tomato plants as blight creeps nearer to us.  Just this week we heard from Steve, the community gardener at Napier Barracks, that blight has appeared there, and so we will be removing lots of the lower leaves next week to try and get the air circulating around the plants in an attempt to keep it at bay.

The Wednesday gardening session was fine, but the wind was blowing hard, making seed sowing an interesting affair, involving huddling behind taller plants or anything that made a wind break, to prevent the seeds from blowing away.   The Saturday session was a complete washout.  Just a couple of us braved the elements to pick a few items, as many things during the summer benefit from being picked regularly (for example the beans) and will then respond by producing even more. The more you pick, the more they grow!  Not so for the tomatoes, the concern being to pick ripe fruits before the slugs get to them, or the birds, or the badgers.  Fortunately only the gardeners appreciate the prickly cucumbers, and we picked the first three this week.

Last week we had planted two beds of late flowering purple sprouting broccoli which we covered with lovely new horticultural netting.  However this week we find that something has been making holes and tears in the netting, which must have been quite hard work, so we can only assume that the badgers are responsible.  We did manage to harvest a pot of chokeberries, or Aronia berries from our two plants this week before they did, and very good they were too.  It has to be said it is the first time we have managed to pick them in a ripe state and still on the bush.  They are sweeter the riper they are, and do not ripen at the same time so the race is on to see who gets the next batch, wildlife, or gardeners. 

You may have noticed a ‘welfare unit’ in the car park near the garden all this week.  At 9am on Monday morning, a team arrived from APHA (Animal and Plant Health Agency).  They are an ‘executive agency’ sponsored by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, the Welsh Government and the Scottish Government.  They are here in response to our beekeepers sightings of the Asian Hornet in Sandgate.  Their focus is on finding where the Asian hornets are nesting and to destroy them.  They have to catch a hornet, mark it and observe which direction they fly in and how long it takes them to return, and so work out where the nest is, or indeed nests.  It is encouraging to know that the sightings are being taken so seriously, however the fact they have been here all week must mean there is much work to do.  A successful Asian hornet nest can have up to 6,000 individuals, producing 350 queens and 900 males.  If they were allowed to take hold in the area, it would be the end of honey bees.  So be vigilant and acquaint yourself with what they look like, and the differences between them and our native hornet species.

Another thing to acquaint you with is the date for the Sea Festival.  We are really looking forward to seeing you there on Sunday 27th August.  We will have amongst other things, a whole range of plants.  This is a major fundraising event for us, so bring sunshine and a whole lot of cash and the willingness to part with it all for a good cause.  If you have any plants going spare, then please do get in touch.

What’s Next?

  • Still need to cut the hedge
  • Still need to prick out seedlings and sow more seeds
  • Still need to bring woodchips up to the garden
  • Cut off more of the lower leaves on the tomato plants

This weeks update from the Sandgate Community Garden Diary.

Posted by Tim Prater in Sandgate Community Garden
Sea Festival and Events Committee Minutes 31-07-2023

Sea Festival and Events Committee Minutes 31-07-2023

The minutes of Sandgate’s Parish Council Sea Festival and Events Committee meeting, held on 31st July 2023, in Sandgate Library.

Sea-Festival-minutes-for-31st-July-23

You can find previous Sandgate Parish Sea Festival and Events Committee Agendas and Minutes on this website. We publish agendas a few days before a meeting. The Clerk then posts draft minutes in the week after a meeting.

We broadcast our meetings live on our Facebook page. Those meeting recordings are then left live for a few months after the meeting, giving you the chance to watch it back later!

The next suitable meeting will formally approve the draft minutes of this meeting. When approved, the Chairman of that meeting then signs them.

The signed minutes of the meeting serve as the legal record of what has taken place at the meeting. Before a meeting approves the draft minutes of a preceding meeting, the meeting may, by resolution, correct any inaccuracies in the draft minutes. The attendance (or otherwise) of the Chairman or those voting in favour to amend or approve of the minutes is irrelevant.

Only if meeting minutes are found to be inaccurate after they have been signed can they then be altered. Inaccuracies in signed minutes can only be amended by resolution at a subsequent meeting.

Posted by Tim Prater in Minutes, Sea Festival
Parish Council Meeting Minutes 31-07-2023

Parish Council Meeting Minutes 31-07-2023

The minutes of Sandgate’s Parish Council meeting, held on 31st July 2023, in Sandgate Library.

Minutes-council-meeting-31-07-23

Previous Sandgate Parish Council Meeting Agendas and Minutes. We publish agendas a few days before a meeting. We then post draft minutes in the week after a meeting.

Most of our meetings are also broadcast live on our Facebook page. Those recordings are left on Facebook for a few months after the meeting so can be watched back later.

We broadcast our meetings live on our Facebook page (although we’re sorry: this one was not). Those meeting recordings are then left live for a few months after the meeting, giving you the chance to watch it back later!

The next suitable meeting will formally approve the draft minutes of this meeting. When approved, the Chairman of that meeting then signs them.

The signed minutes of the meeting serve as the legal record of what has taken place at the meeting. Before a meeting approves the draft minutes of a preceding meeting, the meeting may, by resolution, correct any inaccuracies in the draft minutes. The attendance (or otherwise) of the Chairman or those voting in favour to amend or approve of the minutes is irrelevant.

Only if meeting minutes are found to be inaccurate after they have been signed can they then be altered. Inaccuracies in signed minutes can only be amended by resolution at a subsequent meeting.

Posted by Tim Prater in Council, Minutes
Kent Household Support Fund – Summer Voucher Scheme

Kent Household Support Fund – Summer Voucher Scheme

Funded by the UK government, the Kent Household Support Fund scheme supports vulnerable Kent households in need of help with significantly rising living costs. The Scheme will be delivered in two phases, Phase 1 Summer Voucher scheme & Phase 2 Winter/Autumn Voucher scheme.

 The Summer Voucher scheme is open for applications from 12pm Tuesday 1 August 2023.  The scheme will close on Thursday 14 September 2023, or when the budget is spent.

If successful, support will be provided in the form of the following: 

  • £100 voucher to be used to pay for food costs within the household.  (Applicants can select an e-voucher from a list of supermarket retailers)

Vouchers will be sent by email or text.  If the person receiving the e-voucher does not have a smart mobile phone or access to an email account, the vouchers can be posted to their home address once the supermarket of choice has been selected by the applicant. This option will be available when completing an application form.

There is a limited amount of funding available for this scheme. Funds will be distributed on a first come, first served basis, with only one award per household

Who is eligible?

Applicants must:

  • be aged 16 or over.
  • be a Kent resident, permanently living within one of the 12 local authorities covered by Kent County Council (this excludes Medway, Bromley, and Bexley).
  • be in receipt of means tested benefits, or have a household income less than £40,000 per annum before tax.
  • not have savings above £1,000.
  • *not be receiving free school meal support within their household.

*Free School Meal eligible families will receive an additional energy voucher for each eligible child via their child’s school outside of this scheme.

 Eligible FSM families will receive a £100 voucher per eligible child direct from their child’s school during the Autumn term. 

Residents with no recourse to public funding are eligible for the scheme. If a National Insurance number is not available, please email householdsupportfund@kent.gov.uk with circumstances and reasons why the applicant should receive this support, attaching supporting evidence to the email.

Application Link

Apply for the Kent Household Support Fund Summer Food Voucher via Household Support Fund – Kent County Council

Voucher timescales

We do aim to send vouchers out as quickly as possible, usually within 7-10 working days of a successful application being made. However there will be high demand for vouchers, and this could impact on timescales.  The applicant will receive email confirmation of the application outcome.

Additional Queries

Any questions can be directed to householdsupportfund@kent.gov.uk or via 03000 412424 (line open Monday to Friday 10am to 3pm).

Posted by Tim Prater in Uncategorised

Sandgate Community Garden: Update 30 July 2023

Sandgate Community Garden Team Diary Entry for 30th July: Watching carefully for signs of tomato blight.

It was surely tempting fate to mention the dreaded tomato blight in the newsletter last week, as the following day it was found in a group of tomato plants at Pent Farm.  The tomatoes there are planted indoors as well as out, and in several locations.  The affected plants were close together and in bush form, whereas the others are cordons with space around them.  So far these are the only infected plants we have found, and they have been quickly removed, but we will keep a close eye on all the others. 

It has to be said that the tomato plants at Enbrook Park are looking particularly splendid, and you can see from the picture below that they are taller than most of the gardeners and as they have plenty of trusses as well as outgrown their supports, we have started to pinch out the tops to prevent any more growth upwards.  The suspicion is that some of our wildlife is sampling some of the lower fruits as we often find half chewed and unripe morsels scattered about the plot. 

During the week we unsurprisingly had little watering to do except for new plantings of spring onions and purple sprouting and a few potted plants.  More lettuces and endives got sown, and weeds cleared in the brassica beds.  The butterfly bush or buddleia behind our tool box was truly living up to its name this week as it has been smothered in butterflies.  Interestingly, all the butterflies were red admirals, and it was great just to stop working for a while to watch them enjoying the flowers. 

The chokeberries or aronias got netted in anticipation of them being eaten by the wildlife as they did last year.  They are rich in antioxidants and ‘essential nutrients that promote healthy growth of cells and protect tissues from damage’.  They have a sharp, sour taste which may not be popular with everybody, however just a few added to cereal or porridge will be beneficial.

The pond has certainly improved due to the rainfall, and of course the duckweed has made an appearance once more which we are keeping in check by spending some time fishing it out with a net.

It has been a task this year to get hold of woodchips.  We use wood chips to create paths on the plot and to mix with other materials to make our compost.  Through a chance encounter, Alistair, our compost champion, met a tree surgeon willing to drop us a truckload of chips for a small charge.  So happily we now have a great pile of the stuff and can stop scratching around trying to scrape up the last bits we had left!

What’s next?

  • Lots of seeds need sowing this week!
  • Cut back the hedge
  • Bring up some of the wood chips to the composting area
  • Prick out some of the new seedlings

This weeks update from the Sandgate Community Garden Diary.

Posted by Tim Prater in Sandgate Community Garden
Planning Committee Minutes 17-07-2023

Planning Committee Minutes 17-07-2023

The minutes of Sandgate’s Parish Council Planning Committee meeting, held on 17th July 2023, in Sandgate Library.

Planning-Minutes-17-07-23

You can find previous Sandgate Parish Planning Committee Agendas and Minutes on this website. We publish agendas a few days before a meeting. The Clerk then posts draft minutes in the week after a meeting.

We broadcast our meetings live on our Facebook page. Those meeting recordings are then left live for a few months after the meeting, giving you the chance to watch it back later!

The next suitable meeting will formally approve the draft minutes of this meeting. When approved, the Chairman of that meeting then signs them.

The signed minutes of the meeting serve as the legal record of what has taken place at the meeting. Before a meeting approves the draft minutes of a preceding meeting, the meeting may, by resolution, correct any inaccuracies in the draft minutes. The attendance (or otherwise) of the Chairman or those voting in favour to amend or approve of the minutes is irrelevant.

Only if meeting minutes are found to be inaccurate after they have been signed can they then be altered. Inaccuracies in signed minutes can only be amended by resolution at a subsequent meeting.

Posted by Tim Prater in Minutes, Planning
Tenants Benefitting from Ross House Revamp

Tenants Benefitting from Ross House Revamp

Tenants have moved into a council-managed housing scheme in Sandgate which has undergone significant improvement works.

Work at Ross House forms part of a wider multi-million pound project to help keep tenants warm in winter and cool in the summer through the installation of energy efficient measures.

Ross House in Ross Way, Sandgate, is the council’s first ‘net zero’ enabled residential block. Retrofit work at this site includes externally insulating and rendering the building, insulating the loft and under floor voids, installing photovoltaic panels on the roof and adding more energy efficient air source heat pumps. The block of 16 apartments has also been redecorated and had replacement kitchens fitted.

The work was completed using funding from the first wave of the Social Housing Decarbonisation Fund (SHDF), alongside match funding from Folkestone & Hythe District Council.

Elaine Cox, chair of the Strategic Tenant Advisory Panel, officially re-opened Ross House on 18 July.

Councillors, staff and tenant representatives spoke to tenants at the event and learned more about the efforts being made to improve the district’s social housing stock.

Cllr Rebecca Shoob, Cabinet Member for Housing and Homelessness, said: “It has been fantastic to see the work that has been undertaken to increase the energy efficiency of Ross House.”

“The work being done across our properties in the district will not only improve the comfort of our tenants’ homes but also reduce their carbon emissions.”

Folkestone & Hythe District Council was recently awarded £2.6m in the second wave of the Social Housing Decarbonisation Fund. The funding will again be matched by the council, bringing the total spend on improving the homes and wellbeing of tenants to £5.2 million.

It will continue the progress made during the first phase, enabling the council to improve the energy efficiency of a further 300 homes over the next two years.

Posted by Tim Prater in News

Free All Day Bus Travel for Older and Disabled Person Bus Pass Holders

1 – 31 AUGUST 2023

Using National Bus Strategy Funding provided by HM Government, throughout August, bus passes for Older and Disabled Persons will be accepted for travel in Kent and Medway before 9.30am. So you can now travel for free up until 11pm.

kent.gov.uk/alldayaugust

Using your pass before 9.30am is valid Monday to Sunday from 1 to 31 August from the first bus of the day up until 11pm for older persons and disabled persons bus pass holders only.

Normal times will apply from 1 September.

All-Day-August-poster

Posted by Tim Prater in News